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Friday, April 18, 2014
ISN'T IT TIME TO ACT AND STOP THE CARNAGE? : Boko Haram will keep killing, and Nigeria's leaders are powerless ... TheGuardianAfricaNetwork ... Islamic militants killed at least 71 people in a bus station bombing and kidnapped 100 school girls this week. Despite his bold words, President Goodluck Jonathan is failing to address the problem, says Simon Allison
A bystander reacts as victims of a bomb
blast arrive at the Asokoro General Hospital in Abuja on 14 April, 2014.
Photograph: Afolabi Sotunde/Reuters
At the beginning of this year, Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan
said it’s only a matter of time before his government defeats
Islamist militant group Boko Haram. “Boko Haram insurgency is a
temporary challenge... We will surely overcome Boko Haram.”
Even
then, in January, these bold words rang hollow (and it didn’t
help the tense sectarian atmosphere that the president was speaking from
a Church of Christ pulpit). Having abandoned any form of diplomacy,
Jonathan’s administration was eight months into an all-out military
offensive against Boko Haram in its northern strongholds. Three states
were, and remain, under a State of Emergency, with curfews in place and
mobile phone signals interrupted to disrupt communications. The army was
out in force, hunting the militants down, while air force bombers
harassed them from the air.
The offensive was Jonathan’s big gesture, a show of force to prove to
his nervous citizens that he was taking Boko Haram seriously. Except
Boko Haram didn’t seem to notice: far from cramping their style,
Jonathan’s heavy-handed tactics have merely pushed the group into more
frequent and more spectacular terrorist attacks. So far, 2014 has been
the bloodiest year of their insurgency: at least 1,500 have been killed
in dozens of attacks, and it’s only April. This compares to 2,100 deaths
between 2009 and 2013.
This week was typical. On Monday, 71 people died in an explosion at a
busy bus station on the outskirts of Abuja. Because of its proximity to
the capital, this incident attracted a lot of media attention, even
though it would not make it into the top five on a list of Boko Haram’s
deadliest attacks of 2014. Then on Tuesday night, the group struck
again, kidnapping more than 100 schoolgirls from their school in
north-eastern Borno state. The aftermath of bomb blast at bus station near Abuja on 14 April 2014. Photograph: Ikechukwu Ibe/REX
In some ways, the latter incident, despite being less expensive in
terms of lives lost (so far, at least; the eventual fate of those
schoolgirls is still unknown), is the more concerning because of what it
shows us about Boko Haram’s strength.
First, the group was able to
overpower the soldiers who had been sent to the school to provide extra
security – not exactly a glowing recommendation of the ability of the
armed forces to protect Nigerian citizens. Second, in flagrant
contradiction of the government’s claim to have forced them out of their
strongholds, the militants clearly have the facilities and resources to
hide 100 terrified school girls, indicating a level of organisation and
security that should have the authorities extremely worried.
The attack on the school was also particularly symbolic. The name
Boko Haram loosely translates as ‘Western education is forbidden’, and
the group encourages parents to send their children to Islamic schools
instead. The attack on the school in Borno is a punishment and a warning
to those who disobey. This approach makes sense, in a strange, twisted
way: it is at schools that children are inculcated with the theoretical
values of the state – in Nigeria’s case, a commitment to secular,
liberal democracy – and it is these values against which Boko Haram
fights, wanting to replace them with a strict commitment to Islamic
Sharia law.
This is not an unreasonable position. The Nigerian state has, by and
large, failed its population. It may be awash in oil wealth, but none of
that trickles down into the population which has yet to see much in the
way of material benefits from an independent Nigeria. Who wouldn’t be
looking for an alternative? A schoolgirl walking in Lagos, Nigeria. Photograph: Sunday Alamba/AP
“Most Nigerians are poorer today than they were at independence in
1960, victims of the resource curse and rampant, entrenched corruption,”
says International Crisis Group in a new report.
“Agriculture, once the economy’s mainstay, is struggling. In many parts
of the country, the government is unable to provide security, good
roads, water, health, reliable power and education. The situation is
particularly dire in the far north. Frustration and alienation drive
many to join “self-help” ethnic, religious, community or civic groups,
some of which are hostile to the state.”
It’s this dynamic – the frustration and alienation felt by the
illiterate, the unemployed, the helpless – which underpins Boko Haram,
driving a steady stream of new recruits into their arms and ensuring
some degree of popular support, without which they could surely not
maintain the sheer breadth of their operations (which are even spilling across
Nigeria’s borders). It also illustrates the futility of the Nigerian
response: guns and soldiers can’t solve decades of poverty and
marginalisation, especially when the soldiers have been themselves implicated in atrocities against civilian populations.
Instead, Nigeria would be better served if it put resources, and real
political clout, behind reforming the state and addressing the
development deficit between north and south. Ironically, President
Jonathan is part of the problem: his presidency has fuelled feelings of
marginalisation in the north, as he is accused of breaking the ruling
party’s unwritten code to alternate leadership between the north and the
south (in other words, the Nigerian president should have been a
northerner for the last four years).
To his credit, Jonathan knows all this. “Life in the North must
change. Development must go to all parts of this country,” he said, to
that same church service. “Let me reassure you that we will continue to
work harder and harder to improve the quality of lives of Nigerians. But
you must know that this cannot be achieved overnight. Even if you go
and plant a crop, it takes a period of time before you start seeing the
fruits.”
Fine words these may be, but that’s all they are: there’s so far been
little evidence of crop-planting from Jonathan’s government, which
means the fruits of development are even further away. In the meantime,
Boko Haram are here to stay.
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